News Archive

Contact Information

Sadat Wins Book of the Year Award from International Association of Penal Law

Professor Leila Nadya Sadat’s edited book, Forging a Convention for Crimes Against Humanity, has received the 2011 Book of the Year Award from the American National Section of L’Association Internationale de Droit Pénal (AIDP).

“I am honored that this book has been recognized by the American Section of the International Association of Penal Law,” says Sadat, who previously received an Article of the Year Award from AIDP for her American Journal of Comparative Law article, “The Nuremberg Paradox.”

“The Crimes Against Humanity Initiative was the most ambitious project the Harris Institute has ever undertaken, and it is gratifying to see the hard work of so many honored in this way, particularly by AIDP, which was a leader in promoting the International Criminal Court as early as 1926,” Sadat adds.

Founded in 1924, AIDP is the world’s oldest association of specialists in penal law. It is committed to the study of criminal policy and the codification of penal law, comparative criminal law, human rights in the administration of criminal justice, and international criminal law.“Forging a Convention is not only a book worthy of praise for its content, but it also so very clearly furthers the goals of our organization,” says Professor Michael J. Kelly, AIDP member and associate dean for international programs at Creighton University School of Law.

The AIDP goals are “to educate the global community on the development and furtherance of international criminal law, and to push governments and courts to adopt more aggressive policies in this regard,” Kelly adds.Forging a Convention includes 15 essays addressing various aspects of crimes against humanity. It also contains the complete text in both English and French of the CAH Initiative’s proposed international convention on this category of crime. Additionally, the book recounts the comprehensive history of the CAH Initiative process.

The proposed CAH Convention builds on the legacy of Nuremberg. Following the 1945 Nuremberg trials, the Genocide Convention was adopted in 1948. The next year, the Geneva Conventions were codified to address war crimes. However, similar conventions were not adopted for crimes against humanity—a category that includes murder, extermination, rape, and torture.

In the decades that followed Nuremberg, the world community continued to see horrific acts perpetrated against citizens of the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda, and other countries around the world. The fruit of the Harris Institute’s CAH Initiative, the proposed convention fills a critical gap in international law.